Open Access
American Research Journal of English and Literature
ISSN (Online): 2378-9026
DOI: 10.46568/arjel
The Nature of Meaning
Department of European Languages, Federal University, Birni-Kebbi, Nigeria
Department of English, Waziri Umar Federal Polytechnic, Birnin-Kebbi, Nigeria
Acheoah, John Emike, Olaleye, Joel Iyiola, ”The Nature of Meaning” American Research Journal of
English and Literature, vol 4, no. 1, 2018, pp. 1-6.
Abstract
This paper examines meaning in language. It is therefore a study in semantics. Semantics is the
study of meaning in terms of the linguistics. Semantics begins from the stopping point of syntax and ends from
where pragmatics begins. A separate discipline in the study of language, semantics has existed for decades. The
term semantics was first used by Breal in 1987 and it does not suggest that there had never been speculations
about the nature of meaning (Ogbulogo (2005). Words, phrases and sentences are used to convey messages in
natural languages. Semantics is the study of meaning systems in language. If meaning is a system, then language
is systematic in nature. In this paper, we investigate the nature of meaning to locate the significance of semantics
in contemporary linguistics. Frege, cited in Sandt (1988:1) rightly notes that “… [If] anything is asserted there is
always an obvious presupposition that the simple or compound proper names used have reference.” Hinging on
different submissions in the literature, we conclude that meaning is: socio-cultural, dynamic, grammar-driven,
conventional, representative (referential), individualistic (non-conventional) and is not exhaustive.